Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner Review

April 14, 2015(updated on March 31, 2022)
Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner

Over the last decade, the Ball Canning folks have brought a handful of canning appliances to market. The first was the FreshTECH Jam and Jelly Maker in the summer of 2012. The FreshTECH Automatic Home Canning System was the thing during the 2014 canning season. And now, we have the Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner and Multi-Cooker.

Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner dial close-up

This electric canner is exactly what I know a number of you have been hoping for. It’s a giant pot that has an independent element so that you can move your processing pot off your stove top and over to the counter.

It holds 8 quarts, nine pints, or a dozen regular mouth half pints (that means that if you stack them, you can process 24 quarter pint jars at once). It’s particularly great if your stove is slow to boil water or if you’ve been warned off canning on a glass top cooktop. It works like any other boiling water bath canner, so if you live at higher altitudes, you will still need to adjust your processing time upwards.

Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner maximum fill line

It has a spout on the left side of the canner, so if your kitchen is arranged in a way where you can set the canner to the right of your stove, you can drain the water directly into the sink. The canner comes with a steaming rack as well as a canning rack, so that you can use it for all your high capacity steaming needs (I could see it being perfect for tamale parties).

It can also be used as a portable cooker, so can work for large amounts of soup, chili, or even something like mulled cider. Nice if you help with community potlucks or church suppers.

Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner spigot.

I’ve now run a number batches of jars through the canner and I am really happy with it. It’s not going to become my primary boiling water bath because I make a lot of small batches and it doesn’t make sense to heat up this much water for two or three pints, but for larger batches, it’s a boon.

It’s also incredibly useful during tomato season and I’ve started bringing it with me to my classes and workshops where I know we’re making multiple batches and so we’ll need more canner space.

Jars in a Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner.

This canner does cost $149.99, which is a pretty penny if you already have a canning set-up you like. If you like the idea of moving your canning pot off your stove top but can’t swing that price point, there is a more affordable way to create something similar.

Get yourself an induction capable stock pot (a classic speckled canner with a flat bottom will work) and the induction burner I have (it’s just $60) and you have a canner you can run anywhere (I highly recommend outdoor canning on really hot days).

Ball logo on the FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner.

My bottom line on the Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner is that it’s a great tool for people who do lots of large batch canning. If you have the budget and storage space for it, I highly recommend it.

Disclosure: The folks at Ball Canning sent me a FreshTECH Electric Canner for review and photography purposes at no cost to me. They are also provided a giveaway unit. No additional compensation was provided for this post and all opinions expressed are my own. 

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1,595 thoughts on "Ball FreshTECH Electric Water Bath Canner Review"

  • I have been using water bathing with just the same pot I make spaghetti. it works, just takes long time.

  • I’m using a stock pot with silicone trivet. Not the most ideal setup, as it can only fit 6 or so 1/2 pint jars and 3 pint jars. Would love to have something with more capacity!

  • We use our large stock pots. The problem is it takes for ever to boil because of the electric stove so I tend to move them to the burner on the propane grill to get it to a boil.

  • I use my grandmothers old on the stove water bath canner. I cook all of my fruits, jams etc. and then use the old water bath on the stove. I usually only can 6 qts at a time. Your new canner looks totally amazing. will have to save up to get one.

  • Right now I use my large stock pot with some canning rings tied together in the bottom. The pot isn’t really tall enough, even for pint jars and it’s a bit wonky. We don’t have air conditioning so running a gas range for hours tends to heat up the house too much to can in summer. I definitely need to get my hands on one of these.

  • I just use the stainless stockpot that we got when we got married. It’s not huge, but I don’t make many things that I want huge batches of anyway. (Exception: salsa.)

  • I use my grandmother’s old, giant granite water bath canner. It had sat in her basement for years before I rescued it last summer for my first adventures in canning!

  • I can like my mother and grandmother’s before me in an old granite ware speckled canner. I would love to have this electric one to set next to my sink.It would be so much easier to fill and empty.

  • I’ve been using two stock pots with dishcloths in the bottom and a fourth burner pot. So far, so good but I love the idea of doing some canning outdoors during the summer. It would make tomato season much easier.

  • I use canning pots I was able to pick up at the flea markets to save money. Just picked a 3rd one up this past weekend for $5. Thank you for the opportunity.

  • I use a stockpot and silicone trivet. The trivet I was first turned on to by this website. It’s been a great addition. I love seeing my red poinsettia like trivet at the bottom on my pot:-)

  • I would love to win this! I started gardening about three years ago and started canning two years ago. I have been using my biggest stockpot with one of my trivets on the bottom.

  • I have a glass cook top stove and cannot use the oversize kettles required to boiling water baths without risking damage to my cook top. This canner is the perfect solution.

  • Now that I’m getting older I worry about dealing with my traditional water bath kettle full of water from sink to stovetop and then back to the sink to empty it when the water is screaming hot. Eight pounds per gallon! This would make it so much easier for people like me to continue canning as they always have in a safer way.

  • We received a pressure canner as a wedding gift and I then swiped one of my mother-in-law’s speckled canners for water bath canning (she has two). This would be a lovely item to have. I like the spout… no more having to wait to try and dump the canner.

  • This looks FANTASTIC, I’d love it!!! I am a newbie to canning and am enjoying it, I am using a stockpot with the rings from mason jar lids.

  • I love this idea and it would make canning outdoors even easier as we have new outdoor outlets installed – perfect to can with!

  • I love the idea of a spout on the side to help drain the water out. I could really see something like this assisting me on heavy canning days. I’ll be in the market or a new stove soon, and I just didn’t know what I was going to do to accommodate my hobby. This looks like it could be the solution I’ve been waiting for!

  • I currently use a Victorio Stainless steel water bath canner for my jars and an 10 quart All-Clad saucepan for my jams. A long way from the Visions by Corningware glass pot that used when I first started canning over 20 years ago. I like my current setup, but I would love to have one of my burners back. 🙂

  • I recently got a 4th burner pot which I absolutely love. Last year I was using a large stock pot with my silicone trivet but need a new pot now as we just got an induction cooktop. This would be perfect! I will have to think about outdoor canning in the summer. Canning in the heat if South Carolina summers is NOT ideal. I usually roast and freeze my tomatoes because of the heat!

  • I have a classic stock pot for water bath canning and a pressure cooker. This would be great for canning season!

  • I use either my steam canner which I hear is a no-no or my pressure canner. This water bath canner looks awesome and I would rather use it over the steam canner.

  • I have been wanting this! I can’t tell you how many time I have placed into my shopping cart and chickening out at the checkout part! Winning one would be wonderful!

  • I use a 25 year old stock pot for waterbath and last year my husband bought me a pressure canner. I managed to put up 1,008 jars of food with them. Lot of work and would like a newer version and/or bigger version but I think I did pretty good.

  • I’m using my mother’s old canning set, though with a new wire rack. The capacity of this electric one looks wonderful!

  • Good to know a bit more about this great item! Working in a smaller kitchen, I currently use one to two regular large WB pots with a rack or two in them. It certainly heats up the kitchen and makes space on the cooktop sparse. I am thinking one of these would be a huge help time-wise and space wise for my kitchen! 🙂

  • Oh, I would love to have this! Although I’m no spring chicken, I am relatively new to canning. I’ve learned from your blog and bought your first book. I’ve tried a few sort of rigged up canning systems which work ok for small batches (the ball green plastic thingie), but I truly need a real setup. Here’s why: Four years ago, I was fortunate enough to be able to buy a 100-year old farmhouse in Mentone, AL, a wonderful old resort/farming town on Lookout Mt.as a retreat. There was an apple tree….and the rest is history. She had not born fruit for about 7 years (the house was a rental), but the Spring after we bought the house, she bloomed and has given me boxes of apples ever since. I live up there the whole month of July and make apple and pear (we found a pear tree totally engulfed in a stand of privet and freed her, too) butters and sauces. A nice full-sized set up would be FABULOUS. Thank you for all I have learned and will continue to learn from you!

  • I use my 23 quart stock pot with one of the racks from my pressure canner, when the stock pot isn’t being used for whatever I’m canning. I use my 16qt pressure canner to waterbath when my stock pot is full of tomato sauce, etc…waiting to be canned. I have limited space on my stove and lots of counter space, the ball canner would make canning high acid foods much more convenient freeing up space on the stove.

  • Last year was my first year canning. I canned about 100 jars of various different things. This year my garden will be bigger and better. So more canning! I use a large blue water bath canner nothing fancy.r

  • Marisa, thanks for the info on the induction burner. I have one that costs a whole lot more and hadn’t seen any this reasonable! Happy to advise my students here in Atlanta that there’s a low cost alternative. They are great as a 5th burner, too!

    Also, I use the portable butane burners too. They can be found for under $30.00. No electricity needed and safe for indoors (which propane is not). Yes, takes fuel but the cartridges last 2 hours on high heat and are very inexpensive. A nice choice as a 5th burner too, and can be used for tail-gate parties, picnics, etc.

  • I am currently using a large enameled pot on (gasp!) my glass top range. This baby is on my “wants” list for sure. My favorite feature is that spout! I do LOVE that I don’t have to lift the monster pot when it is full…waiting hours for it to cool (i have a commercial sink with a wing just waiting to hold this). I also LOVE that this can double as warm beverage dispenser for large crowds.

  • I have a speckled canned that I used with my mom for years. I love this idea and have been thinking about buying one. Winning would be better!

  • I began canning last summer and was hooked by the end of the year. I got both of my siblings interested and now we will be canning together. Would love to win this canner.

  • Good Ole waterbath canner on my stove top. Nothing special. My hubby got me a propane burner to free up the stove a little, I’m excited to try that. I would love the new canner!

  • I love to can.. I’m using a huge enamelware waterbacth canner that hubby bought for me at an antique store. It holds quite a few jars but is far too heavy for me to move by myself. I would love to have a canner with a spigot for emptying the water! What a great idea!!

  • i have a flat top cooking range and I don’t like canning on it. I would love to try this canner.

  • Ugh. Unfortunately I don’t have a canning solution so I end up freezing everything. Freezer jam, freezer tomatoes, etc…not the best solution.

  • i have two sizes of traditional speckled water bath canners but I just hate having to heat up the house in Tomato Season. I would LOVE to win this and if I dont I am saving my pennies! WANT WANT WANT

  • I would love to try this new canner.. I currently only can in small batches due to non- working large burner on stove ( hubby not ready to purchase new stove – it still works!). It would be great to free up space on my stove! If I am not a winner I will definately check this out. Thanks for all your helpful product ideas!

  • I had been making due with my biggest stock pot, but it really wasn’t big enough for pint jars. I also brew beer, so I was in the market for a pot that could handle 5 gallons of wort. A big ol’ canning pot fits the bill nicely, though it’s kind of unwieldy and difficult to fit on my stove.

  • I usually can small batches, so I use a smaller water bath on my stove top. Question: You mentioned not using this all the time because you don’t make the batch quantity needed for this pot. Are you saying you can’t use this pot for small batches?

    1. You can use it for smaller batches. However, I prefer to scale the amount of water I use to the batch size I’m canning. I’m not going to heat this giant canner up for three half pint jars.

  • I have a cuisinart stock pot but the only way I can get to to boil on the glass top stove is to put my heavy, cast-iron dutch oven lid on top. It’s not the greatest system. Also: outdoor canning! That sounds amazing in the middle of the summer when the kitchen can be such a steamy mess.

  • I’ve only done small-batch (3 jars of jam) canning with a pot on the stovetop. Since I’m a total novice, I don’t have a good setup, and I’ve burnt my fingers and broken jars trying to get things in and out of the water. I’d love to get into more preserving, though!

  • I am using a Mirro water bath canner . Sometimes I take it to the porch and put it on a hot plate when I have a lot of canning to do on a hot summer day. I would love to have this nice electric one.

  • I would love to be able to can outside in the summer, instead of looking out my kitchen window while canning, wishing I was in the warm, sunny weather!

  • I have a large pressure cooker with a little rack on the bottom. I had never even thought about stacking pint jars. Although I’m not sure that mine would be tall enough for that. This one would be perfect especially since my house gets so hot when I start canning stuff.

  • Oh, what a joy this would be to have! My current set-up is an old canning pot and rack that I bought at an estate sale a few years ago, on a glass-top electric stove that takes forever to get adequate heat to boil a substantial quantity of water. I’ve since substituted a silicone trivet for the rack. Beyond canning, I could use this pot for steaming tamales (which I love to make, but don’t have a good way to steam a lot of), and making cheese.

  • I used to use just a hot water bath pan years ago but I want to get a little more modern. Thanks for an awesome giveaway.

  • I have a enameled oval ham cooker with a built in rack and cover. I put it for canning on the central hob of my LaCanache gas range. The cooker is fine but big, and is old with a lot of chips and now rust in the enamel. I can a lot
    To have this new canner and the freed up space? I would feel like a queen.

  • I have my Mom’s old pot but I like the idea of getting it off the stove top. Seems like it takes forever to get the water to boiling.

  • I have a glass stove top that takes forever to boil. Therefore, it has prevented me from doing much canning for my large family. This would be a huge blessng!

  • i love canning but the house I am living in does not have a stove that gets hot enough to can, so this would be awesome. Defiantly looking into buying one of these!

  • I still have my large blue speckled boiler…42 years old & not rusted. I bought a smaller one for pints a few hears ago. Also have a pressure canner. This new one would expect great because I
    could drain some of the water out making it easier to empty. I’ve also been using canner on the side burner of my grill outside to cut down on the heat & humidity in kitchen.

  • Have two speckled granite canner and one pressure canner- and would LOVE this to move operations outside on my porch – it’s beautiful!!

  • I use a canner pot, but I don’t like it because it gets a white film on everything and it’s hard to get rid of. Though I like having the canner rack, I almost prefer my days of using my big pasta pot and throwing either joined rings or my silicone hot pad at the bottom of it. Would love to step it up a notch! (Also, I’m using a canning pot on a glass cooktop, which I know is technically a no-no, but I’ve never had a hard time getting a good seal or a constant boil, so I think I’m OK.

    1. Rose, the white film is probably from minerals in your water. Add some white vinegar to the canning water to prevent those mineral particles from adhering to the pot or the jars.

  • I have been dying to try canning for a few years now, but have never been brave enough to actually try it; seems that something like this might make things a bit easier for this wannabe-newbie!

  • I’m using my bread maker for making jams, because it has that feature, but I really need a good canner.

  • we’re currently using graniteware, which gets us through most of our canning; for smaller batches, i throw a silicone trivet or a dish towel in the bottom of a smaller stockpot. i also got a 4th burner pot for christmas – haven’t used it for canning yet, but it works a treat with asparagus. 🙂

  • We love canning, but not as easy as you’d think to find a good canning pot for an induction cooktop. This would make things much easier.

  • I would absolutely love to have an electric water bath canner. I currently use a classic speckled canner that I bought about 15 years ago. Our cook top is propane but we have an 8kw solar array that provides most of our power. A change from propane-fueled canning to solar electric would take my preserving completely off fossil fuels. Hurrah!

  • I have a Ball stainless steel 21 qt canner that I use with a Waring Pro burner, not my glass stovetop. I also use a 12 qt stockpot with a silicone trivet (both thanks to you!) and an 8 qt stockpot with a rack for smaller batches

  • I enjoy canning every year, it helps me to calm down to know i will have the foods for the winter an sometimes even during the next summer for my family

  • I have the classic speckled pot with a wire rack, which I actually really like. It fits nicely on my gas stove, and I have the blanching pot that I use for smaller batches.

  • I confiscated my moms canner a number of years ago. She wasn’t using it at the time. Last season she wanted to make some salsa and borrowed my sisters. This would be great to have and then I could return my moms to her.

  • Having limited room, this would come in handy on my porch to can with. I use the old speckled pot that sometimes disappears when my family is lucky enough to get a lobster or two given to them, then they snag my canner 🙁

  • I have a cheap electric glass top stove. I can only use a small stock pot for canning as my stove takes way to long to heat anything in large amounts.

  • I have my husband’s grandmothers blue speckled canner! It’s almost rusted out but I continue to use it! I also use a lot of her old canning jars because I know she used all this with love and a lot of hard work!

  • What a great giveaway. been using a stock pot on the stove, It would be great
    to a have a real canning set up. thank you

  • I have 2 pressure canners and 1 old granite water bath canner
    I need to replace I don’t have a canning season I can always find something to can

  • My set up is an old enamel canning stock pot on an electric range with a special reinforced canning element. The original element was burnt out from my first canning adventure thanks to high heat and the weight of a canner!

  • Oh my,be still my heart. I use the old-style water canner. Not my grandma’s, I taught myself how to can that way as a young wife/mother. I am seventy years old widow and just canned a batch of spaghetti sauce last week. This “canner” would be wonderful to have in my kitchen.

  • I have Mom’s old speckled canner and a glass top stove. This would make everything so much faster and more efficient!

  • I have a blue and white speckled big ol’ canning pot from mom with rack; an asparagus pot for tiny batches; and a Mirro weighted gauge pressure canner. If I want a midsize batch, I use a tall stock pot + silicone trivet.

  • great idea. I can on a glass top gas stove so the heavy pot is always a little concerning. I no longer use a “canning” pot – just a large pot with a silicone trivet that I fashioned from a silicone lid. Love the spigot – no lugging boiling water if I need to use the stove. And with the outdoor plug I could skip making it rain kn my kitchen 🙂 Hope to see a lower price point though.

  • i use the blue speckled pot…but would love to have a second canner going. Oregon strawberries will be coming in soon and it seems I can never make enough jam and preserves!

  • i can in a large stockpot, but my glass too stove takes forever to heat up, so I would love this Ball water bath canner!

  • I don’t currently can anything as I have an ancient smooth top stove from the seventies. I was told you can’t use smooth top stoves for canning. This would be great to get started.

  • I have 2 pressure canner and 1 old granite water bath
    I’m always finding something to can all year round
    I don’t have a canning season thank you for letting me enter

  • Me and my husband use a big stock pot with a silicone trivet – actually the Blossom Trivet from Spice Ratchet which you had shown on your blog 🙂

  • I use an enamel water bath canner but also have a Presto pressure canner. Both have seen their share of use as I love preserving fresh foods!

  • I’ve been primarily using a cheap stockpot with a wire rack. I’m not happy with the setup, mostly because the cheap pot means tons of heat loss. I’m in the process of swapping out some of my elements to make the whole process a bit more streamlined.